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John Candy Tribute John Candy Biography (1950-1994) Actor, comedian. Born John Franklin Candy on October 31, 1950, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Candy took drama courses at a community college and held various odd jobs before winning his first acting job in a children's theater group in his native Ontario. After a series of small parts in television commercials and low-budget Canadian films, Candy got his big break when he was offered membership in the Second City comedy troupe. In 1977, he became a regular performer and writer for the group's television show, SCTV, along with Harold Ramis and Eugene Levy. Candy was a featured performer by the time the show came to network television in 1981. He won Emmys for the show's writing in 1981 and 1982. In 1984, the Ron Howard directed comedy Splash, in which he co-starred with Tom Hanks and Daryl Hannah, made Candy a movie star. Although he was sometimes criticized for his choice of roles, audiences loved Candy for his roly-poly good nature and wry humor. Some of his most popular films include The Blues Brothers (1980), Spaceballs (1987), featuring Mel Brooks; Planes, Trains and Automobiles (1987), costarring Steve Martin; Uncle Buck (1989), and the Disney feature Cool Runnings (1993). The veteran of more than forty films, Candy was also anavid sports fan and co-owner of a Canadian Football League franchise, the Toronto Argonauts. With actors Dan Aykroyd and Jim Belushi, he owned a chain of blues bars and restaurants called House of Blues. At 6 feet 2 inches tall, Candy weighed over 250 pounds and often spoke of having a problem controlling his weight. Sadly, on March 4, 1994, while shooting a film (Wagons East) in Durango, Mexico, Candy died in his sleep of a heart attack. Tags: john candy tribute video actor comedian comedy hollywood sctv music |
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Jerry Orbach Tribute Jerry Orbach Biography (1935-2004) Actor. Born Jerome Orbach, on October 20, 1935, in the Bronx, New York. The only child of Emily (nee O'Lexy), a greeting card manufacturer, and Leon Orbach, a restaurant manager. Since neither of his parents were strangers to the performing arts (his father had tried vaudeville and his mother once had a stint as a radio singer), they were always supportive of Jerry's desire to be an actor. While Jerry was still in grade school, the family moved frequently but finally settled in Waukegan, Illinois, where he joined the football team and began learning basic acting techniques from his speech teacher. In 1952, following his high school graduation, he worked in summer stock at the Chevy Chase Country Club in Wheeling, Illinois, where he got to try his hand at everything from minor performances to set building. After attending the University of Illinois for one year, Jerry transferred to Northwestern University, where he continued to study the Stanislavsky method of drama. In the fall of 1955, Orbach decided to forego his senior year at Northwestern and move to New York City, where he found work as an understudy in The Threepenny Opera. He stayed with the show for over three years, eventually playing the lead character, Mack the Knife. During this time, he continued to study acting under the tutelage of Herbert Berghof, Mira Rostova, and Lee Strasberg of The Actor's Studio. In 1959, he received two simultaneous acting offers: one for a Broadway production paying $250 a week and the other for an off-Broadway show paying only $45 a week. Orbach chose the latter and created the role of El Gallo in the off-Broadway production The Fantastiks, which met exceptional reviews and became the longest running off-Broadway show in history. Orbach left the show in 1961 to make his Broadway debut in David Merrick's production of Carnival! and won rave reviews for both his singing and his acting. Following this success, Orbach experienced a brief slump; discouraged about being typecast in musicals, he spent a few miserable months trying unsuccessfully to break into films in Hollywood. However, he hit his stride once again when he returned to the East and earned a Tony nomination for his portrayal of Skye Masterson in Guys and Dolls and made a stunning, critically acclaimed performance as a neurotic Jewish intellectual in Scuba Duba. He then went on to win a Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical in 1969 for his portrayal of Chuck Baxter in Promises, Promises, a Neil Simon adaptation of Billy Wilder's 1960 film The Apartment. In 1976, he received another Tony nomination for his role in Chicago. He last appeared on Broadway in 1981, playing Julian Marsh in 42nd Street at the Majestic Theatre in New York. Launching off from his illustrious theater career, Orbach began to move increasingly toward roles in film and television in the 1980s and 1990s. He was a recurring guest star on Murder, She Wrote and played the title role in its short-lived spin-off, The Law and Harry McGraw. His stint in Neil Simon's Broadway Bound (1991) and his frequent appearances on the sitcom The Golden Girls both earned him Emmy nominations. His first major supporting film role came in Sidney Lumet's drama Prince of the City (1981), and he followed up with the crime-thriller F/X in 1986. In 1987, he changed pace, playing the stern but loving father of a rebellious teenage girl in the runaway hit Dirty Dancing, costarring Jennifer Grey and Patrick Swayze, still his best-known movie role. He then lent his voice and personality to the loquacious lantern, Lumiere, in the animated musical Beauty and the Beast (1991). Most recently, he starred in Chinese Coffee (2000) with longtime friend Al Pacino, who also produced and directed the film. Orbach first appeared on the critically acclaimed NBC series Law & Order in 1990 and in 1992 landed a regular role on the show, playing the quick-witted and sharp-tongued Detective Lennie Briscoe. Orbach and actress/writer Marta Curro, who was a fellow understudy in The Threepenny Opera, married in June 1958 and had two sons, Anthony and Christopher, before divorcing in 1975. In 1979, Orbach married Elaine Cancilla, who had replaced Chita Rivera as his co-star in the 1975 production of Chicago. Orbach died at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center Manhattan in December 2004 after complications from prostate cancer. The actor was 69. Tags: tribute music video law and order sam waterston benjamin bratt jesse l. martin chris noth try to remember |
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Percy Pringle Tribute This tribute is only for fan purposes. No copyright infringement intended. I DON'T OWN ANY OF THESE PICTURES! COPYRIGHT GOES TO PercyPringle.com, World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. & other sources Percy Pringle (born April 10, 1954) better known by his ring name Paul Bearer, is a former professional wrestling manager. He is best known for his career with World Wrestling Federation/Entertainment as the manager of The Undertaker and Kane. Percy Pringle went to Mobile's Catholic School, and later graduated from the McGill Institute. After enlisting in the U.S. Air Force and completing basic training, he recieved his honorable discharge and went straight into a Funeral Director service job. Pringle was a regular at Gulf Coast Wrestling events in Mobile, Alabama while growing up. He got to know many of the wrestlers, as well as the front office personnel and later became a ringside photographer. Though known through most of his career as a manager, Pringle started out as a wrestler. In June 1974, he made his wrestling debut, wrestling as "Mr. X" (under a mask) in Greenville, AL. He continued to wrestle later known as "The Embalmer". In April 1977, he began his managerial career as Percy Pringle III. Pringle married and he and his wife,welcomed their first son in 1979. He left the wrestling business and went back to school and earned his Funeral Director/Embalmer's Certification from San Antonio College. In 1984, Pringle returned to wrestling again as Percy Pringle and worked for Fritz von Erich's World Class Wrestling Association. During this time he managed the likes of Rick Rude, Blackjack Mulligan, The Great Kabuki, Lex Luger and even Steve Austin. On December 22, 1990, he joined the World Wrestling Federation and would be known as "Paul Bearer". His charge this time was the Undertaker. Pringle worked for the company for ten years, most of the time managing the Undertaker, but also managing Kane and Mankind (Mick Foley). He also worked as a road agent for the time he was not on television. In 2001, Percy's wife was striken with breast cancer and he cut his time with the WWE back to care for her. He left the company in 2002 when his contract came up. Later that year, he went backstage to serve as a WWF road agent, stage manager, and talent scout.He spent the next year working with Total Nonstop Action Wrestling. In October 2003, he signed a new three-year contract with WWE. At that time, he was suffering from health problems and depression related to his morbid obesity and underwent gastric bypass surgery in November 2003. As a signing bonus, WWE agreed to help pay for the surgery. When the Undertaker returned to his old "deadman" gimmick at Wrestlemania 20, Pringle returned with him as Paul Bearer once again. However after a few months, the storyline involving Paul Bearer had ran its course and he has left the WWE again, at least as far as television is concerned. On June 10, 2005, Bearer announced that he had signed a new deal with WWE which would allow WWE to market his persona and which would involve him attending autograph sessions and making promotional appearances. Such an appearance occurred in late January 2007 at a SmackDown/ECW live event in Mobile, Alabama, where he joined the Brothers of Destruction at ringside, wearing his Paul Bearer attire, and carrying the original urn. He later commented on the event in his blog. He has recently appeared in the "Where are they now" page, on the WWE website. In September and October 2005 he conducted three shoot interviews for Ring of Honor. Two were done exclusively about him, talking about his career in wrestling. The third was with friend and fellow wrestling manager Jim Cornette. He returned fulltime to the funeral business in 2006. In 2005, Bearer started his own independent promotion known as Gulf South Wrestling, which he announced closed on his official blog in May 2007, due to his fulltime schedule in funeral service. Personal life Has two sons: Michael and Daniel, who wrestle as The Future Legend D.J. Pringle respectively on the independent circuit. Pringle's health has greatly improved since his surgery. His official site has a page featuring pictures of him, one taken the night before his bypass surgery and a second taken on the first anniversary of the operation. One year later, he admitted in an entry on his blog that he had weighed 525 pounds (238 kg) before the operation but is now under 300 pounds (136 kg). Tags: percy pringle tribute paul bearer wwe wwf legend |
User: johnblackstone1952 |
Briscoe & Greene Tribute A Tribute to Briscoe & Greene Lennie Briscoe (1992-2004) Detective Leonard W. "Lennie" Briscoe was a fictional character on NBC's long running crime drama, Law & Order. He was featured on the show for 12 seasons, from 1992 to 2004. He was created by Walon Green and Rene Balcer, and was portrayed by Jerry Orbach. He also appeared in all three Law & Order spinoffs, and was part of the original cast of Law & Order: Trial by Jury, appearing in only the first two episodes due to Orbach's death. Lennie Briscoe is introduced as the new senior detective in the Homicide Department of the New York City Police Department's 27th Precinct (L&O: "Point of View"). His boss during his first season on the show is Capt. Don Cragen; a year later, Lt. Anita Van Buren takes over the homicide squad. He was previously assigned as a detective in the 116th Precinct in Queens (L&O: "Corruption"). Briscoe joins the Precinct after Det. Mike Logan's partner, Sgt. Phil Cerreta, is shot by a black market arms dealer and is given a desk job. Since then, Briscoe has become one of the two most popular characters in the history of the show, the other being A.D.A/D.A. Jack McCoy. Logan is transferred in 1995 to the Domestic Dispute Department in Staten Island for slugging Councilman Kevin Crossley, a politician who had just gotten off on a murder charge (L&O: "Pride"), and is replaced by Det. Rey Curtis. After four years, Curtis goes into early retirement to take care of his disease-stricken wife and he is replaced by Det. Ed Green in 1999. Ed Green (1999-2008) Edward "Ed" Green is a fictional character on the NBC crime drama Law & Order, created by Rene Balcer and portrayed by Jesse L. Martin. Green represents the L&O franchise's return to the wild, "Dirty Harry" type of character once popularized by Mike Logan (Chris Noth). Among the few personal touches made to the character is that he has an affinity for punk rock, particularly Elvis Costello, and gambling, making trips to Atlantic City often enough that Briscoe teased him about it. It was revealed that Green had stopped gambling but then had fallen back into it briefly after Briscoe's death (L&O: "Burn Card"). Green has occasionally mentioned that his family traveled around the world due to his father's work as an oil engineer, and that he had lived in the Middle East at some point. He has also mentioned that he grew up in a religious family. He revealed that his father has Alzheimer's disease (L&O: "Talking Points"). Also, he reveals that he at one time had experience with "screwing around with someone who's married." In numerous episodes, female characters refer to him as attractive and respond accordingly (he sometimes receives calls from girlfriends or mentions "his girl". Apparently, he took a girl named Keisha Lockwood to the prom). He wears expensive Rolex watches, which Briscoe often refers to throughout their time together on the show. Green is often a source of varied information in investigations. He speaks Spanish, some Russian ("Enough to pick up a date," (L&O: "Fallout")), and a little French (L&O: "Hitman"), and is up to date on popular culture, and appears to have a strong classical education. Frequently, he uses informal slang, addressing men as "bro" and referring to other men as "dudes." He often uses bad grammar when talking to suspects or people he does not respect. Tags: law and order music video jerry orbach jesse l. martin s. epatha merkerson sam waterston elisabeth röhm |
User: johnblackstone1952 |
Carnival of Souls Music Video Carnival of Souls is a horror film released in 1962. Produced and directed by Herk Harvey for an estimated $33,000, the movie never gained widespread public attention when it was originally released as it was intended as a B film and today, remains obscure. Set to an organ score by Gene Moore, Carnival of Souls relies more on atmosphere than on special effects to create its mood of horror. The film has a cult following and occasionally has screenings at local film and Halloween festivals. Herk Harvey was a Lawrence, Kansas-based director and producer of industrial and educational films for the Centron Corporation. While vacationing in Salt Lake City, he developed the idea for the movie after driving past the abandoned Saltair Pavilion. Hiring an unknown actress, Lee Strasberg-trained Candace Hilligoss, and otherwise employing mostly local talent, he shot Carnival of Souls in three weeks, on location in Lawrence and Salt Lake City. Tags: carnival souls music video phantom of the opera |
User: johnblackstone1952 |
An All Star Tribute To Those Who Have Passed Away Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945) James Dean (1931-1955) Humphrey Bogart (1899-1957) Oliver Hardy (1892-1957) Stan Laurel (1890-1965) Ritchie Valens (1941-1959) Buddy Holly (1936-1959) JP Richardson "The Big Bopper" (1930-1959) Marilyn Monroe (1926-1962) Patsy Cline (1932-1963) John F. Kennedy (1917-1963) Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965) Nat King Cole (1919-1965) Walt Disney (1901-1966) Jayne Mansfield (1933-1967) Martin Luther King Jr (1929-1968) Robert F. Kennedy (1925-1968) Judy Garland (1922-1969) Sharon Tate (1943-1969) Jimi Hendrix (1942-1970) Janis Joplin (1943-1970) Jim Morrison (1943-1971) Louis Armstrong (1901-1971) Edie Sedgwick (1943-1971) Bruce Lee (1940-1973) Mama Cass Elliot (1941-1974) Sal Mineo (1939-1976) Elvis Presley (1935-1977) Zero Mostel (1915-1977) Bing Crosby (1903-1977) John Wayne (1907-1979) Sir Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980) Steve McQueen (1930-1980) John Lennon (1940-1980) Bob Marley (1945-1981) Natalie wood (1938-1981) John Belushi (1949-1982) Dominique Dunne (1959-1982) Karen Carpenter (1950-1983) Marvin Gaye (1939-1984) Andy Kaufman (1949-1984) Vincent J. McMahon (1914-1984) George Savalas (1924-1985) James Cagney (1899-1986) Gia Carangi (1960-1986) Heather O' Rourke (1975-1988) Roy Orbison (1936-1988) Kenneth McMillan (1932-1989) Lucille Ball (1911-1989) Gilda Radner (1946-1989) Rebecca Schaeffer (1967-1989) Jim Henson (1936-1990) Freddy Mercury (1946-1991) Sam Kinison (1953-1992) Audrey Hepburn (1929-1993) André the Giant (1946-1993) Brandon Lee (1965-1993) Raymond Burr (1917-1993) River Phoenix (1970-1993) Telly Savalas (1922-1994) William Conrad (1920-1994) Sorrell Booke (1930-1994) Bill Hicks (1961-1994) John Candy (1950-1994) Kurt Cobain (1967-1994) George Peppard (1928-1994) Hugh O'Connor (1962-1995) Selena Quintanilla-Perez (1971-1995) Dean Martin (1917-1995) Ella Fitzgerald (1917-1996) Tupac Shakur (1971-1996) Eva Cassidy (1963-1996) Christopher Wallace "The Notorious B.I.G." (1972-1997) James Stewart (1908-1997) Princess Diana Of Wales (1961-1997) John Denver (1943-1997) Brian Pillman (1962-1997) Michael Hutchence (1960-1997) Charles Hallahan (1943-1997) Chris Farley (1964-1997) Denver Pyle (1920-1997) J. T. Walsh (1943-1998) Tammy Wynette (1942-1998) Frank Sinatra (1915-1998) Phil Hartman (1948-1998) Dana Plato (1964-1999) Owen Hart (1965-1999) Gorilla Monsoon (1937-1999) Jim Varney (1949-2000) Walter Matthau (1920-2000) Alec Guinness (1914-2000) Yokozuna (1966-2000) Anthony Quinn (1915-2001) Carroll O' Connor (1924-2001) Jack Lemmon (1925-2001) Aaliyah (1979-2001) George Harrison (1943-2001) Layne Staley (1967-2002) Lisa Left Eye Lopes (1971-2002) Davey Boy Smith (1962-2002) Curt Hennig (1958-2003) Elizabeth Ann Hulette (1960-2003) Fred Blassie (1918-2003) Gregory Peck (1916-2003) Katherine Hepburn (1907-2003) Barry White (1944-2003) John Ritter (1948-2003) Johnny Cash (1932-2003) Jonathan Brandis (1976-2003) Earl Hindman (1942-2003) Alan King (1927-2004) Ronald Reagan (1911-2004) Ray Charles (1930-2004) Marlon Brando (1924-2004) Laura Branigan (1957-2004) Rodney Dangerfield (1921-2004) Christopher Reeve (1952-2004) Jerry Orbach (1935-2004) Johnny Carson (1925-2005) Pope John Paul II (1920-2005) Frank Gorshin (1933-2005) Stephen Elliott (1918-2005) Ismail Merchant (1936-2005) Eddie Albert (1906-2005) Anne Bancroft (1931-2005) Dana Elcar (1927-2005) Luther Vandross (1951-2005) James Doohan (1920-2005) Peter Jennings (1938-2005) Barbara Bel Geddes (1922-2005) Bob Denver (1935-2005) Don Adams (1923-2005) Charles Rocket (1949-2005) Eddie Guerrero (1967-2005) Pat Morita (1932-2005) Wendie Jo Sperber (1958-2005) Richard Pryor (1940-2005) Chris Penn (1965-2006) Coretta Scott King (1927-2006) Don Knotts (1924-2006) Darren McGavin (1922-2006) Maureen Stapleton (1925-2006) Gene Pitney (1940-2006) Louis Rukeyser (1933-2006) Jack Warden (1920-2006) Bruno Kirby (1949-2006) Steve Irwin (1962-2006) Peter Boyle (1935-2006) William Hanna (1910-2001) Joseph Barbera (1911-2006) James Brown (1933-2006) Anna Nicole Smith (1967-2007) Roscoe Lee Browne (1925-2007) Tom Poston (1921-2007) Tammy Faye Messner (1942-2007) Merv Griffin (1925-2007) Luciano Pavarotti (1935-2007) George Grizzard (1928-2007) Evel Knievel (1938-2007) Dan Fogelberg (1951-2007) Brad Renfro (1982-2008) Suzanne Pleshette (1937-2008) Heath Ledger (1979-2008) Tags: all star tribute music video celebrities dead stars actors singers comedians politicians wrestlers |
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Jerry Orbach Slideshow Tribute Jerry Orbach Biography (1935-2004) Actor. Born Jerome Orbach, on October 20, 1935, in the Bronx, New York. The only child of Emily (nee O'Lexy), a greeting card manufacturer, and Leon Orbach, a restaurant manager. Since neither of his parents were strangers to the performing arts (his father had tried vaudeville and his mother once had a stint as a radio singer), they were always supportive of Jerry's desire to be an actor. While Jerry was still in grade school, the family moved frequently but finally settled in Waukegan, Illinois, where he joined the football team and began learning basic acting techniques from his speech teacher. In 1952, following his high school graduation, he worked in summer stock at the Chevy Chase Country Club in Wheeling, Illinois, where he got to try his hand at everything from minor performances to set building. After attending the University of Illinois for one year, Jerry transferred to Northwestern University, where he continued to study the Stanislavsky method of drama. In the fall of 1955, Orbach decided to forego his senior year at Northwestern and move to New York City, where he found work as an understudy in The Threepenny Opera. He stayed with the show for over three years, eventually playing the lead character, Mack the Knife. During this time, he continued to study acting under the tutelage of Herbert Berghof, Mira Rostova, and Lee Strasberg of The Actor's Studio. In 1959, he received two simultaneous acting offers: one for a Broadway production paying $250 a week and the other for an off-Broadway show paying only $45 a week. Orbach chose the latter and created the role of El Gallo in the off-Broadway production The Fantastiks, which met exceptional reviews and became the longest running off-Broadway show in history. Orbach left the show in 1961 to make his Broadway debut in David Merrick's production of Carnival! and won rave reviews for both his singing and his acting. Following this success, Orbach experienced a brief slump; discouraged about being typecast in musicals, he spent a few miserable months trying unsuccessfully to break into films in Hollywood. However, he hit his stride once again when he returned to the East and earned a Tony nomination for his portrayal of Skye Masterson in Guys and Dolls and made a stunning, critically acclaimed performance as a neurotic Jewish intellectual in Scuba Duba. He then went on to win a Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical in 1969 for his portrayal of Chuck Baxter in Promises, Promises, a Neil Simon adaptation of Billy Wilder's 1960 film The Apartment. In 1976, he received another Tony nomination for his role in Chicago. He last appeared on Broadway in 1981, playing Julian Marsh in 42nd Street at the Majestic Theatre in New York. Launching off from his illustrious theater career, Orbach began to move increasingly toward roles in film and television in the 1980s and 1990s. He was a recurring guest star on Murder, She Wrote and played the title role in its short-lived spin-off, The Law and Harry McGraw. His stint in Neil Simon's Broadway Bound (1991) and his frequent appearances on the sitcom The Golden Girls both earned him Emmy nominations. His first major supporting film role came in Sidney Lumet's drama Prince of the City (1981), and he followed up with the crime-thriller F/X in 1986. In 1987, he changed pace, playing the stern but loving father of a rebellious teenage girl in the runaway hit Dirty Dancing, costarring Jennifer Grey and Patrick Swayze, still his best-known movie role. He then lent his voice and personality to the loquacious lantern, Lumiere, in the animated musical Beauty and the Beast (1991). Most recently, he starred in Chinese Coffee (2000) with longtime friend Al Pacino, who also produced and directed the film. Orbach first appeared on the critically acclaimed NBC series Law & Order in 1990 and in 1992 landed a regular role on the show, playing the quick-witted and sharp-tongued Detective Lennie Briscoe. Orbach and actress/writer Marta Curro, who was a fellow understudy in The Threepenny Opera, married in June 1958 and had two sons, Anthony and Christopher, before divorcing in 1975. In 1979, Orbach married Elaine Cancilla, who had replaced Chita Rivera as his co-star in the 1975 production of Chicago. Orbach died at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center Manhattan in December 2004 after complications from prostate cancer. The actor was 69. Tags: tribute music video law and order sam waterston benjamin bratt jesse l. martin chris noth try to remember |
User: johnblackstone1952 |
Jerry Orbach Tribute Jerry Orbach Biography (1935-2004) Actor. Born Jerome Orbach, on October 20, 1935, in the Bronx, New York. The only child of Emily (nee O'Lexy), a greeting card manufacturer, and Leon Orbach, a restaurant manager. Since neither of his parents were strangers to the performing arts (his father had tried vaudeville and his mother once had a stint as a radio singer), they were always supportive of Jerry's desire to be an actor. While Jerry was still in grade school, the family moved frequently but finally settled in Waukegan, Illinois, where he joined the football team and began learning basic acting techniques from his speech teacher. In 1952, following his high school graduation, he worked in summer stock at the Chevy Chase Country Club in Wheeling, Illinois, where he got to try his hand at everything from minor performances to set building. After attending the University of Illinois for one year, Jerry transferred to Northwestern University, where he continued to study the Stanislavsky method of drama. In the fall of 1955, Orbach decided to forego his senior year at Northwestern and move to New York City, where he found work as an understudy in The Threepenny Opera. He stayed with the show for over three years, eventually playing the lead character, Mack the Knife. During this time, he continued to study acting under the tutelage of Herbert Berghof, Mira Rostova, and Lee Strasberg of The Actor's Studio. In 1959, he received two simultaneous acting offers: one for a Broadway production paying $250 a week and the other for an off-Broadway show paying only $45 a week. Orbach chose the latter and created the role of El Gallo in the off-Broadway production The Fantastiks, which met exceptional reviews and became the longest running off-Broadway show in history. Orbach left the show in 1961 to make his Broadway debut in David Merrick's production of Carnival! and won rave reviews for both his singing and his acting. Following this success, Orbach experienced a brief slump; discouraged about being typecast in musicals, he spent a few miserable months trying unsuccessfully to break into films in Hollywood. However, he hit his stride once again when he returned to the East and earned a Tony nomination for his portrayal of Skye Masterson in Guys and Dolls and made a stunning, critically acclaimed performance as a neurotic Jewish intellectual in Scuba Duba. He then went on to win a Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical in 1969 for his portrayal of Chuck Baxter in Promises, Promises, a Neil Simon adaptation of Billy Wilder's 1960 film The Apartment. In 1976, he received another Tony nomination for his role in Chicago. He last appeared on Broadway in 1981, playing Julian Marsh in 42nd Street at the Majestic Theatre in New York. Launching off from his illustrious theater career, Orbach began to move increasingly toward roles in film and television in the 1980s and 1990s. He was a recurring guest star on Murder, She Wrote and played the title role in its short-lived spin-off, The Law and Harry McGraw. His stint in Neil Simon's Broadway Bound (1991) and his frequent appearances on the sitcom The Golden Girls both earned him Emmy nominations. His first major supporting film role came in Sidney Lumet's drama Prince of the City (1981), and he followed up with the crime-thriller F/X in 1986. In 1987, he changed pace, playing the stern but loving father of a rebellious teenage girl in the runaway hit Dirty Dancing, costarring Jennifer Grey and Patrick Swayze, still his best-known movie role. He then lent his voice and personality to the loquacious lantern, Lumiere, in the animated musical Beauty and the Beast (1991). Most recently, he starred in Chinese Coffee (2000) with longtime friend Al Pacino, who also produced and directed the film. Orbach first appeared on the critically acclaimed NBC series Law & Order in 1990 and in 1992 landed a regular role on the show, playing the quick-witted and sharp-tongued Detective Lennie Briscoe. Orbach and actress/writer Marta Curro, who was a fellow understudy in The Threepenny Opera, married in June 1958 and had two sons, Anthony and Christopher, before divorcing in 1975. In 1979, Orbach married Elaine Cancilla, who had replaced Chita Rivera as his co-star in the 1975 production of Chicago. Orbach died at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center Manhattan in December 2004 after complications from prostate cancer. The actor was 69. Tags: tribute music video law and order sam waterston benjamin bratt jesse l. martin angela lansbury chris noth |
User: johnblackstone1952 |
Briscoe retires from the NYPD. (April 2004) Briscoe retires from the NYPD in 2004 (L&O: "C.O.D."). His successor in the 27th Precinct was Joe Fontana (Dennis Farina). I have no copyright over this video; I am only a fan. Law & Order and its characters, names, etc. are copyright NBC. Tags: jerry orbach detective lennie briscoe s. epatha merkerson Lt. anita van buren jesse l. martin ed green |
User: johnblackstone1952 |
A Different Look at 'Law & Order' (2006) "A Different Look at Law and Order." The featurette is pretty interesting and has interviews with the cast. It also has a nice tribute to Orbach where the actors discuss what he meant to the show, and the type of actor that he was. I have no copyright over this video; I am only a fan. Law & Order and its characters, names, etc. are copyright NBC. Tags: law and order trial by jury jerry orbach lennie briscoe bebe neuwirth kirk acevedo |
User: johnblackstone1952 |
Jerry Orbach's Final On screen Appearance (November 2004) Jerry Orbach's final onscreen appearance in the episode "Forty-One Shots". Orbach was so ill at the time that he could barely speak above a whisper. Thus his final line of dialogue had to be rewritten; at the trial of a cop-killer, NYPD members had been barred from the courtroom, and they were waiting outside with Lennie Briscoe. After Lennie (peering in through the door) learned of the guilty verdict, he turned and whispered to the cops "They got him!" I have no copyright over this video; I am only a fan. Law & Order and its characters, names, etc. are copyright NBC. Tags: law and order trial by jury jerry orbach lennie briscoe bebe neuwirth kirk acevedo peter coyote |
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Law & Order Music Video Law & Order, the longest running crime series and the second longest-running drama series in the history of American broadcast television, started it's 16th season on NBC in the fall of 2005. The brainchild of creator Dick Wolf, Law & Order is the most successful brand in the history of primetime television; the winner of the 1997 Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series; ties Cheers and M*A*S*H for the most consecutive best series nominations (eleven) and the longest-running drama series currently on American television. The series has also turned into one of entertainment's preeminent brands using a distinct ripped from the headlines format, and has spawned the successful spinoffs Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Crime & Punishment and Law & Order: Trial by Jury. Filmed entirely in and around New York City, this realistic yet fictional drama looks at crime and justice from a dual perspective. In the first half-hour, Detectives Joe Fontana (Dennis Farina) and Edward Green (Jesse L. Martin) investigate crimes and apprehend suspects under the supervision of their precinct lieutenant, Anita Van Buren (S. Epatha Merkerson). The focus shifts in the second half-hour to the criminal courts as Executive Assistant District Attorney Jack McCoy (Sam Waterston) and Assistant District Attorney Borgia (Parisse) work within a complicated justice system to prosecute the accused under the guidance of District Attorney Arthur Branch (Fred Dalton Thompson). Some cases may be simple, but most are multi-faceted. The investigations are challenging, prosecutions are complicated, and decisions about legal procedures and plea-bargaining are vexing. In the arduous and complex process of determining guilt and innocence, lives often hang in the balance. Law & Order has been renewed through 2006 and delivers some of the highest ratings on television, ranking fourth for any drama on any network among adults 18-49 for the past four full seasons. Season-to-date, the show remains a top-25 series among adults 18-49, a top-20 series in total viewers and one of the most upscale dramas on television. Law & Order was also television's #5 drama in overall total viewers for the 2003-04 season with an average of 15.9 million viewers. The acclaimed crime drama has chased away more than 20 competing dramas from the Wednesday (10-11 p.m. ET) hour since moving to that time period in 1992-1993. In 2006, after nearly fourteen years of airing at 10:00 PM, the series was moved to 9:00 PM to make room for the new NBC series Heist. After only two weeks, NBC opted to return the show to it's 10:00 P.M. timeslot after the show fared poorly at 9:00 P.M. Tags: law and order music video jerry orbach chris noth dann florek michael moriarty steven hill eurythmics sweet dreams |
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John Ritter Tribute John Ritter Biography (1948-2003) Best known as the loose-limbed klutz Jack Tripper from the hit ABC sitcom Three's Company, John Ritter also had a long (if undistinguished) film career, dating back to the early '70s. Perhaps taking a cue from Robin Williams, Ritter fashioned a full beard when he put his slapstick days behind him, remaking himself as a serious dramatic actor both on television and in the movies in the 1990s. Ritter was born in Burbank, CA, on September 17, 1948, the second son of Western singing stars Tex Ritter and Dorothy Fay, whose talent for song he once admitted he did not inherit. Ritter was class body president at Hollywood High School before enrolling at the University of Southern California, where he majored in psychology and minored in architecture. In his third year, he decided to take a drama class taught by Nina Foch, and quickly changed his major, graduating in 1971. (He later studied with Stella Adler and the Harvey Lembeck Comedy Workshop.) His first film role was in the 1971 film The Barefoot Executive. Minor roles during the 1970s finally gave way to major success in 1977, when Ritter was cast as the pratfalling roommate of two beautiful Southern Californian women on Three's Company. The program became one of the most popular on the air, known for its farcical scenarios based on wild misunderstandings, some of which were fueled by Ritter's Jack Tripper pretending to be gay to throw off the landlord. Ritter was praised for his sharp timing and rubbery ability to bounce around the set through all variety of physical comedy. His work earned him an Emmy. Having become a major television star, Ritter enjoyed the program's success through 1985, when its spin-off (Three's a Crowd) went off the air. He worked on TV movies during the show's run, and found more TV work awaiting him upon its conclusion (the dramedy Hooperman in 1988, the comedy Hearts Afire in 1992). His familiar mug and goofball shtick earned him leads in a handful of lesser film comedies in the late '80s and early '90s, including Real Men (1987), Skin Deep (1988), Stay Tuned (1992), and two Problem Child films (1990 and 1991), on the set of which he met future wife Amy Yasbeck. Not satisfied with his comic pigeonholing, Ritter took well-received strides toward drama in the 1990s. He made a lasting impression on critics as a gay dollar-store owner in Billy Bob Thornton's Sling Blade (1996), as well as a psychiatrist treating a hitman in Henry Bromell's Panic (2000). Ritter has also made recurring guest appearances on the hit television programs Ally McBeal and Felicity, the latter of which cast him in the agonizing role of a frequently relapsing alcoholic father. In 2002 Ritter returned to television in his own new comedy series, 8 Simple Rules for Dating my Teenage Daughter. Though the show proved a modest success, Ritter's sudden death due to aortic dissection in early September of 2003 left castmates and fans alike shocked and deeply saddened. Tags: john ritter tribute pop music video katey sagal kaley cuoco amy davidson martin spanjers darren hayes i' miss you |
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The Carpenters - Beechwood 4-5789 (1981) The Carpenters - Beechwood 4-5789 (1981) Tags: the carpenters beechwood 4-5789 music video 1981 karen carpenter |
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The Carpenters - Touch Me When We're Dancing (1981) The Carpenters - Touch Me When We're Dancing (1981) Tags: the carpenters touch me when we're dancing 1981 music video karen carpenter |
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Whitney Houston - Greatest Love Of All (1985) Whitney Houston - Greatest Love Of All (1985) Tags: whitney houston greatest love of all r&b music video |
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Roy Orbison - You Got It (1988) Roy Orbison - You Got It (1988) Tags: roy orbison you got it music video 1988 diamond awards classic rock rockstar legend |
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Whitney Houston - How Will I Know (1985) Whitney Houston - How Will I Know (1985) Tags: whitney houston how will know 1980s pop music video |
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Roy Orbison And K.D Lang - Crying (1987) Roy Orbison And K.D Lang - Crying (1987) Tags: roy orbison KD lang crying music video 1987 rockstar legend |
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Roy Orbison - Walk On (1968) Roy Orbison - Walk On (1968) Tags: roy orbison walk on music video rock legend |